New CEOSE report stresses importance of science and engineering opportunities for all citizens

National Science Foundation programs and policies have helped increase the participation of women, minorities and people with disabilities in science, technology, engineering and mathematics, according to a new report prepared by the Committee on Equal Opportunities in Science and Engineering. Yet despite measurable gains, the report, Broadening Participation in America's Science and Engineering Workforce, notes that progress has been slow and uneven across underrepresented groups and the various science and engineering fields.

CEOSE, a congressionally mandated committee established in 1980, advises NSF on policies and programs for increasing the number of underrepresented individuals in the STEM fields.

'The report documents the leadership role NSF has played for the past quarter of a century in broadening pathways for participation in the nation's STEM enterprise,' said CEOSE chairman, Robert Lichter. 'It also illustrates that bold, innovative, long-term initiatives are still needed, especially at the institutional level.'

CEOSE considers broadening participation an urgent need because of the nation's changing demographics, decreasing numbers of foreign nationals entering the STEM workforce and growing international competition for scientific and engineering talent. National ideals of equity and justice demand that all Americans have equal opportunities in science and engineering. But developing an adequate supply of technologically trained workers is also critical if the United States wants to maintain its technological leadership and global competitiveness.

'If the U.S. wants to safeguard its technological leadership, it must develop the science, math and engineering talents of all its citizens,' says CEOSE report chairwoman Beverly Hartline. 'It is the surest strategy for bringing the best ideas, highest creativity and greatest innovation of our citizens to advance the frontiers of knowledge and tackle today's unprecedented challenges and tomorrow's unanticipated ones.'

The CEOSE report, which 'lauds the Foundation for its vision, outstanding work, and dedication to its mission,' fulfills the requirements of the NSF Reauthorization Act of 2002 (H.R. 4664) by summarizing CEOSE's findings since its inception (1980), providing a 10-year retrospective on NSF's broadening participation efforts and analyzing recent trends in STEM participation.

'Broadening participation is one of NSF's top priorities,' says NSF Director Arden L. Bement, Jr. 'We will continue to rely on the expert judgment of CEOSE to inform our efforts for encouraging, catalyzing and accelerating progress in this critical area.'